• Welcome to Photrio!
    Registration is fast and free. Join today to unlock search, see fewer ads, and access all forum features.
    Click here to sign up

Lens names: How the heck do they come up with these things?

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
202,853
Messages
2,846,582
Members
101,570
Latest member
Justgregor
Recent bookmarks
0
Meyer-Optik Görlitz made a 135/2.8 Orestor that I've been trying to find in Exakta mount at swap meets. It's a beauty:

http://www.wrotniak.net/photo/exakta/lenses.html

(scroll down to the telephoto lenses)

I have no idea what Orestor means.
 
i have been using a movantica f2
i stopped using it cause all my exposures
kept coming out kind of $h¡††Y ...
 
Well, I looked through hundreds of lens names. You can divide them into names hinting via Greek or Latin at their characteristics, referring to the manufacturer or being pure fantasy-names.


My all-time-favourite could have become
the “SCHNELLARBEITER” lens.

I don’t think the name is related to the aperture.

(However there is quite a chance that its name relates to the lens designer E. Arbeit.)

Schnellarbeiter = schnell arbeiter = fast worker (literal German), no? I suspect you know that AgX.

Sonnar= Sonn(-e) + ar
sonne =sun (literal German)
-ar -> personalizes (usually) a verb

so Sonnar = maybe sun catcher or light catcher, light painter :wink:, or something?
 
Hi Ole,

yes, "A-" means not (or without) here.
"Planat" comes from "planaein" , greek for to wander, here spherical aberrations are meant.
So Aplanat is a lens without / with reduced spherical aberrations.
Btw, the word "planet" comes from "planaein" , too...

The latin word "planus" means flat. On microscope optics a common suffix like in "Plan-Apochromat".

Best
Jens
I wonder if my idea that some manufacturers, with earlier (and maybe some current) lenses ended the lens name with a reference to what the lens formula was. i.e. -AR. Examples: Zeiss-Tessar, Elmar-E. Leitz Tessar, Ektar-Eastman Kodak Tessar, Xenar- Schneider Tessar. Made sense to me........Regards!
 
Schnellarbeiter = schnell arbeiter = fast worker (literal German), no? I suspect you know that AgX.
Yes, indeed.
When I first read that name I thought of a joke designation. But it turned out to be the original name...
Those were the times when lenses where still working for us.
 
I wonder if my idea that some manufacturers, with earlier (and maybe some current) lenses ended the lens name with a reference to what the lens formula was. i.e. -AR. Examples: Zeiss-Tessar, Elmar-E. Leitz Tessar, Ektar-Eastman Kodak Tessar, Xenar- Schneider Tessar. Made sense to me........Regards!

Yes, a Tessar is made of four (greek: "tessares") elements (in three groups).
And Xenar/Xenon have "xenos" meaning strange or different in their name.

Best
Jens
 
If we still had the auto search you would see that this has been covered in details with a collection of many references and explanations.
 
For a long time I wondered what significance the name Takumar had. They say (the ubiquitous "they") that one member of the founding Asahi family was named Takuma.
 
Something that has baffled me ever since becoming involved with photography is the thinking behing naming lenses. I've read that Tessar comes from a Greek word which I do not know, but that has something to do with its four element design. Where do the names like Summicron, Summilux, Rodagon, Angulon, Raptar, Componon, Xenon, Claron. Noctilux I think I get, f/1 so it's good at night and the word nocturnal makes me think that Nocti- might be Latin, but where does the -lux come from? Anyways, just curious about all this! Thanks again,

- Justin
summilux sound like a sum of lux or lots of light to me.
 
Yes, obviously the Summilux needs a great lot of light, whereas as the Noctilux can cope with the night...
 
I've read that Tessar comes from a Greek word which I do not know

For some reason, I always associate Tessar with the given name Tess or Tessa (as in the informal variant of Theresa/Teresa/Terese). I associate Planar with plane, as in flat. Likewise the various Summi/Summa lenses as implying the ultimate, the pinnacle, the best.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom